NEW YORK (RNS) — When the Rev. Winnie Varghese, 53, took a seat on the broad steps of the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, as the late afternoon sun beat down across New York City, there were tears apparent in her eyes.
“What a beautiful responsibility it is to have to think about how to care for people and how to care for community,” Varghese told RNS outside the cathedral on Monday (July 14), on the heels of being named the church’s new dean. “How do you get your head around it, you know?
“St. John the Divine was so in my imagination as a young person, a place where really magical things happened,” Varghese said. “In my growing-up mind, it was kind of a big statement of what the church was supposed to be about.”
Born to immigrant Indian parents and raised in Dallas, Varghese first encountered the historic cathedral not in person, but in the pages of her local newspaper. She remembered, as a 12-year-old, reading about a winding procession of camels, elephants and other animals making their way around the church for its annual St. Francis Day celebration, a tradition that honors St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals and ecology.
“It shifted my imagination from what I thought were the narrow lanes of what faith had to do with to the entire planet,” Varghese said. “That there’s nothing that our faith doesn’t have to do with, that God doesn’t have to do with.”
On July 1, Varghese became the first woman elected to lead the largest Episcopal cathedral in the United States. She lives in New York City with her spouse and two grown children. The appointment of Varghese, a queer woman of Indian descent, to the prominent pulpit represents the Episcopal church’s continued push toward inclusion and its outspoken embrace of many progressive causes, especially around immigration and LGBTQ affirmation.

FILE – The Rev. Winnie Varghese speaks during a press conference at St. James Terrace, Thursday, May 18, 2023, in the Bronx, New York. (Photo by Meagan Saliashvili)
Varghese is known for her leadership on these issues, frequently speaking on LGBTQ+ rights, racial justice and the public life of the church. In 2022, she preached at the Washington National Cathedral for a Sunday Pride service.
“She is the future of our church,” said the Rev. Kelly Brown Douglas, the canon theologian at the Washington National Cathedral and visiting professor at Harvard Divinity School. Douglas was the first Black woman to be elected as the dean of any Episcopal seminary in the world. She also served as co-chair on the search committee that ultimately hired Varghese.
“Because of who she is, because of the power, the competency of who she is, she’s going to be breaking a lot of glass ceilings,” Douglas said. “But for Winnie, it’s not simply about winning, it’s about who she’s bringing with her through those doors.”
Since 2021, Varghese has served as rector of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Atlanta, one of the largest Episcopal parishes in the region. Before that, she was the rector of St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan’s East Village. She is also the author of two books: “Church Meets World” and “What We Shall Become.” Still, when she was considering applying for her current role, uncertainty lingered.
“I remember thinking, people like me don’t do jobs like that,” she said.

The Rev. Winnie Varghese poses inside the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine on Monday, July 14, 2025, in New York City. (RNS photo/Fiona Murphy)
The Rt. Rev. Matthew Heyd, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, played an important role in Varghese’s appointment as dean, naming the search committee that set out to find the cathedral’s next leader.
A colleague who has known Varghese for more than two decades, Heyd said her candidacy quickly rose to the top.
“Everywhere she’s been, her thinking, her preaching, her writing has transformed the community,” he said. “She helps widen our imagination for what’s possible, if we’re not afraid.” For Heyd, her election also signals an intention for the diocese at large. “There’s no more visible leadership role than being dean at the cathedral,” he said. “And we believe our diversity makes us stronger. So we want to model what we believe to the world.”
The Rev. Anne Marie Witchger, the current rector of St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery, has followed Varghese’s ministry for much of her adult life. Witchger was trained at Union Theological Seminary, where, according to her, Varghese, who graduated in 1999, remains something of a legend.
“I’m in awe of Winnie,” Witchger said. “She embodies the priesthood in a way that is authentic, thoughtful, courageous and wise.”
The two later connected through justice work in the Episcopal Diocese of New York, including a public response to the police killing of parishioner Deborah Danner and through diocesan racial justice pilgrimages to the South.